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Definition of croon verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

croon

verb
 
/kruːn/
 
/kruːn/
[transitive, intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they croon
 
/kruːn/
 
/kruːn/
he / she / it croons
 
/kruːnz/
 
/kruːnz/
past simple crooned
 
/kruːnd/
 
/kruːnd/
past participle crooned
 
/kruːnd/
 
/kruːnd/
-ing form crooning
 
/ˈkruːnɪŋ/
 
/ˈkruːnɪŋ/
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  1. croon (something) to sing something quietly and gently
    • She gently crooned a lullaby.
    • Bobby Darren was crooning ‘Dream Lover’.
    • She crooned softly to herself.
    Word Originlate 15th cent. (originally Scots and northern English): from Middle Low German and Middle Dutch krōnen ‘groan, lament’. The use of croon in standard English was probably popularized by Robert Burns.
See croon in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
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